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- From: jmt0165@u.cc.utah.edu (Jon Taylor)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: Review of Loompanics drug books
- Date: 8 Feb 1994 13:13:13 -0700
- Message-ID: <2j8rop$ru6@u.cc.utah.edu>
-
-
- I just got an order in from Loompanics, and I thought I'd share my
- thoughts on the books that I got, and how I would rate them based on a
- letter grading system. These were:
-
- * Getting started in the illicit drug business
- * Recreational drugs: a complete guide to manufacturing
- * Secrets of methamphetamine manufacture
- * The construction and operation of clandestine drug labs, and
- * E for ecstacy
-
- 1. Getting started in the illicit drug business
- This rather thin book is a basic guide on how to be a drug dealer.
- It covers dealing in pot, cocaine, and (oddly enough) quaaludes. It is
- set in a slightly larger-than-normal and rather annoying looking typeface.
- Topics covered include dealing with customers, avoiding the police,
- setting up a 'goon squad', and various others. All in all, though, a
- rather small, superficial and not very worthwile book.
- Grade: D
-
- 2. Recreational drugs: a complete guide to manufacturing
- This book covers the manufacture of most kinds of recreational
- drugs, as well as showing how to make/buy labware, precursors, and other
- useful stuff. Unfortunately, most of the book is indecipherable Ochem
- gobbeldygook, rendering the synthesis descriptions hard to follow. There
- is very little attempt made to simplify the syntheses, and one gets the
- feeling that most of the information was copied verbatim from the patents
- or journal articles, the authors' statements of experience in running an
- illicit lab notwithstanding. Granted, some chem knowledge is definitely
- necessary when attempting complicated organic syntheses, but somehow Uncle
- Fester managed to put all that information into his book (see below)
- without adding the pompous, irritating feel to his book that 'Professor
- Buzz' has added to his. Nevertheless, if one is prepared to wade through
- all of that, there is a lot of very useful information contained in this book.
- Grade: C+
-
- 3. Secrets of methamphetamine manufacture
- This was one of the best of the lot. The syntheses are explained
- in detail, LOTS of alternate routes for most every step are given, and one
- gets the distinct impression that the author has a lot of firsthand
- experience with this subject. This is the third edition, which came out
- in print mere days before I ordered it. New topics in this edition
- include making speed from ephedrine, making ice, expanded precursor
- syntheses, and the manufacture of your friend and mine, methcathinone.
- All in all, a very well-written, comprehensive and easy-to-read book.
- Grade: A
-
- 4. Construction and operation of illicit drug labs
- This one was also good. Although not very long, the author
- manages to cover the subject of setting up and running a lab quite
- thouroughly. As with the above book, the author sounds like he knows the
- subject he writes about from personal experience. Topics covered include
- picking a location, construction, dealing the product, packaging, and
- buying and making glassware and other equipment. No specific syntheses
- are covered as the author explicitly states that this is outside the scope
- of the book, but what the book does cover, it covers well.
- Grade: B+
-
- 5. E for ecstacy
- This is supposedly the most comprehensive and well-written overview of
- Ecstacy currently on the market. It covers most anything one would want
- to know about the drug in a manner somewhat similar to the way my FAQ
- does. However, the rather unscientific way in which it goes about it is
- (at least to me) a little unsatisfying. This is particularly odd for a
- book that has as many references and footnotes as this one does -
- practically every sentence has a superscript tacked onto it. Most of the
- book consists of anecdotal information, personal quotes, news clippings,
- and the author's own ruminations. The bibliography is very extensive and
- well-organized, probably because it was written by Alexander Shulgin and
- not the author himself. The organization of the book is very confusing,
- there being very little rhyme or reason to the layout. The bibliography,
- for example, comes before several other sections that I would think
- should normally come before it in such a book.
- To add to the mess, the cover of the book is a *VERY* annoying sparkly
- rainbow diffracting mirrorlike sustance which is quite distracting. In
- conclusion, this book does have a lot of interesting info, but I do not
- consider it to be a very worthwhile overview. The impression I get of the
- author, if you'll pardon the editorializing, was of an aging british
- hippie-type that got heavily into Ecstacy and started obsessing about it to
- such a degree that he felt the need to write a book about it, but did not
- have the skills to do so in an organized and structured way. Why in god's
- name Sasha Shulgin donated that lovely bibliography to this disorganized
- mess of a book is beyond me. If you buy this book, be prepared to do a
- lot of slogging.
- Grade: C
-
- Bear in mind that these are only my opinions. People who have
- more, less or different knowledge of the subjects in these books may think
- of them differently than I have - as always, YMMV.
-
- -Jon
-
-
-